This article by Ellen Brown
covers the present machinations under way as local governments struggle to
reestablish the integrity of their titles system which has clearly been massively
compromised by outrageous fraud and general behavior.
The solutions listed are a
patchwork ad hoc system confronting a endemic attack on the underlying integrity
of title.
I would like to see a suspension
of all interest against properties in which title has been so compromised. We have to start somewhere and this would
motivate the perpetrators of this disaster to spend the resources needed to
repair or even define the problem.
Rather importantly is would bring
to a grinding halt the bookkeeping dance presently underway to push unrealized losses
forward in time.
Occupy the Neighborhood: How
Counties Can
Use Land
Banks and Eminent Domain
Saturday 14 January 2012
by: Ellen Brown, Truthout | News
Analysis
A foreclosed home in Salt Lake City , Utah .
(Photo: Monica Almeida / The New York Times)
An electronic database called MERS (Mortgage Electronic Registration
Systems) has created defects in the chain of title to over half the homes in America .
Counties have been cheated out of millions of dollars in recording fees, and
their title records are in hopeless disarray. Meanwhile, foreclosed and
abandoned homes are blighting neighborhoods. Straightening out the records and
restoring the homes to occupancy is clearly in the public interest, and the
burden is on local government to do it. But how? New legal developments are
presenting some innovative alternatives.
John O'Brien is register of
deeds for Southern Essex County, Massachusetts .
He is mad as hell and he isn't going to take it anymore. He calls his land
registry a "crime scene." A formal forensic audit of the properties
for which he is responsible found that:
Only 16 percent of the
mortgage assignments were valid.
Twenty-seven percent of the
invalid assignments were fraudulent, 35 percent were "robo-signed"
and 10 percent violated the Massachusetts
Mortgage Fraud Statute.
The identity of financial
institutions that are current owners of the mortgages could be determined for
only 287 out of 473 (60 percent).
There were 683 missing
assignments for the 287 traced mortgages, representing approximately $180,000
in lost recording fees per 1,000 mortgages whose current ownership could be
traced.
At the root of the problem is
that title has been recorded in the name of a private entity called MERS as a
mere placeholder for the true owners. The owners are a faceless, changing pool
of investors owning indeterminate portions of sliced and diced securitized
properties. Their identities have been so well hidden that their claims to
title are now in doubt. According to the auditor:
What this means is that ... the
institutions - including many pension funds - that purchased these mortgages
don't actually own them....
The March of the Attorneys General
John O'Brien was thrilled when
Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley went to court in December against
MERS and five major banks - Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo,
Citigroup and GMAC. Coakley says banks have "undermined our public land
record system through the use of MERS."
Other attorneys general are also
bringing lawsuits. Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden is going after MERS in
a suit seeking $10,000 per violation. "Since at least the 1600s," he
says, "real property rights have been a cornerstone of our society. MERS
has raised serious questions about who owns what in America ."
Biden's lawsuit alleges that
MERS violated Delaware 's
Deceptive Trade Practices Act by:
Hiding the true mortgage owner
and removing that information from the public land records.
Creating a systemically
important, yet inherently unreliable, mortgage database that created confusion
and inappropriate assignments and foreclosures of mortgages.
Operating MERS through its
members' employees, whom MERS confusingly appoints as its corporate officers so
that they may act on MERS' behalf.
Failing to ensure the proper
transfer of mortgage loan documentation to the securitization trusts, which may
have resulted in the failure of securitizations to own the loans upon which
they claimed to foreclose.
This last allegation - that
there are fatal defects in the loan documentation - may be even more conclusive
than the MERS defect in establishing a break in the chain of title to
securitized properties. Mortgage-backed securities are sold to investors in
packages representing interests in trusts called REMICs (Real Estate Mortgage
Investment Conduits). REMICs are designed as tax shelters; but to qualify for
that status, they must be "static." Mortgages can't be transferred in
and out once the closing date has occurred. The REMIC Pooling and Servicing
Agreement typically states that any transfer after the closing date is invalid.
Yet few, if any, properties in foreclosure seem to have been assigned to these
REMICs before the closing date, in blatant disregard of legal requirements. The
whole business is quite complicated, but the bottom line is that title has been
clouded not only by MERS, but because the trusts purporting to foreclose do not
own the properties by the terms of their own documents.
Courts Are Taking Notice
The title issues are so
complicated that judges themselves have been slow to catch on, but they are
increasingly waking up and taking notice. In some cases, the judge is not even
waiting for the borrowers to raise lack of standing as a defense. In two cases
decided in New York
in December, the banks lost although their motions were either unopposed or the
homeowner did not show up, and in one, there was actually a default. No matter,
said the court; the bank simply did not have standing to foreclose.
In Citigroup v. Smith, 2011 NY
Slip Op 52236 (U) (December 13, 2011), the mortgage document acknowledged that
MERS was not the lender, but was "a separate corporation that is acting
solely as a nominee for Lender and Lender's successors and assigns." The
court held that since MERS was not a party to the underlying note, when it
assigned the mortgage to plaintiff Citigroup there was no assignment of the
note; and "a transfer of [a] mortgage without the debt is a nullity and no
interest is acquired by it."
Failure to comply with the terms
of the loan documents can make an even stronger case for dismissal. In Horace
v. LaSalle, Circuit Court of Russell County , Alabama , 57-CV-2008-000362.00 (March 30, 2011), the court
permanently enjoined the bank (now part of Bank of America ) from foreclosing on the plaintiff's
home, stating:
[T]he court is surprised to the
point of astonishment that the defendant trust (LaSalle Bank National
Association) did not comply with New York Law in attempting to obtain
assignment of plaintiff Horace's note and mortgage....
[P]laintiff's motion for summary
judgment is granted to the extent that defendant trust ... is permanently
enjoined from foreclosing on the property....
Relief for Counties: Land Banks and Eminent Domain
The legal tide is turning
against MERS and the banks, giving rise to some interesting possibilities for
relief at the county level. Local governments have the power of eminent domain:
they can seize real or personal property if (a) they can show that doing so is
in the public interest, and (b) the owner is compensated at fair market value.
The public interest part is easy
to show. In a 20-page booklet titled "Revitalizing Foreclosed Properties
with Land Banks," the US
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) observes:
The volume of foreclosures has
become a significant problem, not only to local economies, but also to the
aesthetics of neighborhoods and property values therein. At the same time,
middle- to low-income families continue to be priced out of the housing market
while suitable housing units remain vacant.
The booklet goes on to describe
an alternative being pursued by some communities:
To ameliorate the negative
effects of foreclosures, some communities are creating public entities - known
as land banks - to return these properties to productive reuse while
simultaneously addressing the need for affordable housing.
States named as adopting land
bank legislation include Michigan, Ohio, Missouri, Georgia, Indiana, Texas,
Kentucky and Maryland. HUD notes that the federal government encourages and
supports these efforts. But states can still face obstacles to acquiring and
restoring the properties, including a lack of funds and difficulties clearing
title.
Both of these obstacles might be
overcome by focusing on abandoned and foreclosed properties for which the chain
of title has been broken, either by MERS or by failure to transfer the
promissory note according to the terms of the trust indenture. These homes
could be acquired by eminent domain both free of cost and free of adverse
claims to title. The county would simply need to give notice in the local
newspaper of an intent to exercise its right of eminent domain. The burden of
proof would then transfer to the bank or trust claiming title. If the claimant
could not prove title, the county would take the property, clear title and
either work out a fair settlement with the occupants or restore the home for
rent or sale.
Even if the properties were
acquired without charge, counties might lack the funds to restore them.
Additional funds could be had by establishing a public bank that serves more
functions than just those of a land bank. In a series titled "A Solution
to the Foreclosure Crisis," Michael Sauvante of the National Commonwealth
Group suggests that properties obtained by eminent domain can be used as part
of the capital base for a chartered, publicly owned bank, on the model of the
state-owned Bank of North Dakota .
The county could deposit its revenues into this bank and use its capital and
deposits to generate credit, as all chartered banks are empowered to do. This
credit could then be used not just to finance property redevelopment, but for
other county needs, again on the model of the Bank of North Dakota . For a fuller discussion of
publicly owned banks, see http://PublicBankingInstitute.org.
Sauvante adds that the use of
eminent domain is often viewed negatively by homeowners. To overcome this
prejudice, the county could exercise eminent domain on the mortgage contract
rather than on title to the property. (The power of eminent domain applies both
to real and to personal property rights.) Title would then remain with the
homeowner. The county would just have a secured interest in the property,
putting it in the shoes of the bank. It could renegotiate reasonable terms with
the homeowner, something banks have been either unwilling or unable to do,
since they have to get all the investor-owners to agree, a difficult task; and
they have little incentive to negotiate when they can make more money on fees
and credit-default-swaps on contracts that go into default.
Settling With the Investors
What about the rights of the
investors who bought the securities allegedly backed by the foreclosed homes?
The banks selling these collateralized debt obligations represented that they were
protected with credit-default-swaps. The investors' remedy is against the
counterparties to those bets - or against the banks that sold them a bill of
goods.
Foreclosure defense attorney
Neil Garfield says the investors are unlikely to recover on abandoned and
foreclosed properties in any case. Banks and servicers can earn more when the
homes are bulldozed - something that is happening in some counties - than from
a sale or workout at a loss. Not only is more earned on credit-default-swaps
and fees, but bulldozed homes tell no tales. Garfield maintains that fully a third of the
investors' money has gone into middleman profits rather than into real estate
purchases and "with a complete loss no one asks for an accounting."
Not only homes and neighborhoods,
but 400 years of property law are being destroyed by banker and investor greed.
As Barry Ritholtz observes, the ability of a property owner to confidently
convey his property is a bedrock of our society. Bailing out reckless
financiers and refusing to hold them accountable has led to a fundamental
breakdown in the role of government and the court system. This can be righted
only by holding the 1 percent to the same set of laws as are applied to the 99
percent. Those laws include that a contract for the sale of real estate must be
in writing signed by seller and buyer, that an assignment must bear the
signatures required by local law and that forging signatures gives rise to an
actionable claim for fraud.
The neoliberal model that
says banks can govern themselves has failed. It is up to county government to
restore the rule of law and repair the economic distress wrought behind the
smokescreen of MERS. New tools at the county's disposal - including eminent
domain, land banks and publicly owned banks - can facilitate this local
rebirth.
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